- Oct 18, 2005
- 3,754
- 10
- 81
Greetings fellow ATers.
Long time reader here, don't post that often though. And I have a major dilemma on my hands, namely... Which card should I get. I'm aiming at a silent PC. My last one was pretty silent
Except for 3D mode after a while... that X1950XTX is a jet engine
I am giving the whole machine away to my father. I can manage with a bit lower performance or a bit higher cost (not that much though
). So, here's the deal:
1. I was planning on getting the IceQ3 HD 3870... it would cost me 340$ (those are the prices here, don't ask - Denmark
) and getting another one in a month or two (since I recon it's stretching it with one card at that res with all eye candy on, right?). It would set me back around 680-700$. A regular one costs around 250-260$ but it's far from being silent, right ? (I have very good hearing, can hear idle noise of my drives from several meters, which are said to be very quiet - many people can't hear 'em from a meter).
2. Getting one 8800GTS 512MB. Now I don't know anything about the noise (which is a major factor) and it's slower than the two HDs in Crossfire, but... it costs around 400$. However, it has enough 'umph' t play everything at my native res with all eye candy on (correct me if I'm wrong here
).
However... I have a very bitter experience with nVidia cards (had a 7800GT), mostly about display quality in games and movies (which was absolutely horrid for me). The moment I moved to a Radeon X1950XTX all the problems went way. And I have yet to encounter anything bad from the day I upgraded. Hence my dilemma. Did the drivers improve at the green camp? Are there problems in games? How's movie playback? Filtering quality? If I can get a pretty solid confirmation that nVidia improved in those areas, I'm not gonna spend 300 bucks more for a bit faster solution (which needs to be quiet). Also, Crossfire is more dependant on driver support, though the Catalyst set is yet to disappoint me in that area (monthly release, new features, stable, fast hotfixing, WHQL). I visited the nVidia page and the last driver for the 8-series is from last year (which kinda made me worried about proper support).
Yes, I can spit the extra 300$ if the nVidia camp didn't move one bit from the moment I left it almost 2 years ago.
Thank you for any insight into the matter
EDIT: Edited the text bit to be a bit clearer and bolded the major points
Long time reader here, don't post that often though. And I have a major dilemma on my hands, namely... Which card should I get. I'm aiming at a silent PC. My last one was pretty silent
1. I was planning on getting the IceQ3 HD 3870... it would cost me 340$ (those are the prices here, don't ask - Denmark
2. Getting one 8800GTS 512MB. Now I don't know anything about the noise (which is a major factor) and it's slower than the two HDs in Crossfire, but... it costs around 400$. However, it has enough 'umph' t play everything at my native res with all eye candy on (correct me if I'm wrong here
However... I have a very bitter experience with nVidia cards (had a 7800GT), mostly about display quality in games and movies (which was absolutely horrid for me). The moment I moved to a Radeon X1950XTX all the problems went way. And I have yet to encounter anything bad from the day I upgraded. Hence my dilemma. Did the drivers improve at the green camp? Are there problems in games? How's movie playback? Filtering quality? If I can get a pretty solid confirmation that nVidia improved in those areas, I'm not gonna spend 300 bucks more for a bit faster solution (which needs to be quiet). Also, Crossfire is more dependant on driver support, though the Catalyst set is yet to disappoint me in that area (monthly release, new features, stable, fast hotfixing, WHQL). I visited the nVidia page and the last driver for the 8-series is from last year (which kinda made me worried about proper support).
Yes, I can spit the extra 300$ if the nVidia camp didn't move one bit from the moment I left it almost 2 years ago.
Thank you for any insight into the matter
EDIT: Edited the text bit to be a bit clearer and bolded the major points